Saturday, September 7, 2013

SASER TECHNOLOGY (Sound/Sonic Resonance) as a source of FREE ENERGY


Michael did a presentation at the Global Breakthrough Energy Movement (BEM) conference in 2012. In this session, he describes free energy system from ancient civilisations, and finishes off with his model for a society based on contributionism, or UBUNTU.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Saser - The Sonic Laser


Scientists from the University of Nottingham have produced a new type of acoustic laser device, called Saser. It is a sonic equivalent to the laser, capable of producing an intense beam of uniform sound waves on a nano scale. The new device could have significant and useful applications in a variety of fields, such as computing and imaging.




 Prof. Anthony Kent (Credit: University of Nottingham)
Prof. Anthony Kent
(Credit: University of Nottingham)
The idea for this latest innovation was conceived in collaboration with colleagues at the Lashkarev Institute of Semiconductor Physics in Ukraine. According to the researchers, it did not begin as a regular experiment – their first tests were performed out of plain curiosity. Professor Anthony Kent, from University of Nottingham’s School of Physics and Astronomy, said: “While our work on Sasers is driven mostly by pure scientific curiosity, we feel that the technology has the potential to transform the area of acoustics, much as the laser has transformed optics in the 50 years since its invention.”

The Saser uses ultra-high frequency sound waves, in a similar manner to the way laser uses light waves. The traditional Light Amplification by the Stimulated Emission of Radiation (LASER) uses packets of electromagnetic vibrations called ‘photons’. The result is a continuous photon beam, created via stimulating electrons with an external power source; the release of energy (occurring as the electrons collide) is made in a highly reflective optical cavity. The coherent and controllable shining beam of laser light is due to the photons’ homogenous frequency and rate of oscillation.

The Saser mimics the laser technology, but instead of light waves it employs sound waves, and instead of photons it sends phonons. In addition, instead of sending waves through an optical cavity, the sonic Saser travels through a tiny structure called a ‘superlattice’. This structure is made out of 50 super-thin sheets of two alternating semiconductor materials, Gallium Arsenide and Aluminum Arsenide. In order to achieve the exact effect, each layer must be as thin as air – just a few atoms thick. When the phonons are inside the superlattice, they bounce, multiply and eventually escape in the form of an ultra-high frequency photon beam.

Previous researches have tried to develop sound-emitting devices, but this is the first time a device emits sound waves in the terahertz frequency range. As for the beam itself, it consists of coherent acoustic waves, produced at nanometer wavelengths. The scientific and technological applications vary; one example of the Saser’s potential is the sonogram, a device that can scan for defects in nanometer scale objects like micro-electric circuits.

Another application converts the Saser beam to terahertz electromagnetic waves. These can be used for medical imaging and security screening. In the nanotechnology field, high intensity sound waves can be used to change nanostructures’ electronic properties; therefore, the Saser could be used as a high-speed terahertz clock, which could make the computers of the future a thousand times faster.

While laser is found in common devices (such as supermarket scanners and DVD players) and across various industries, the Saser is still under development. However, its makers are convinced that it will become just as common.

In addition to the accolade given by the publication of the study in Physical Review, the research team has won a grant of £636,000 from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council; the team intends to use the grant to further develop the Saser technology over the next four years.

TFOT has previously covered a research that aims to model the sound of water, conducted by scientists at Cornell University in Ithaca, as well as the development of flexible, transparent nanotube-based loudspeakers at Tsinghua University and Beijing University. Other related TFOT stories include the Laser ‘Knife’, a device that fits to the front of a laser source and tames it into usable beams that are able to travel long distances, and the world’s first weapons-grade electronic laser, which is being developed by Northrop Grumman. 

For more information about the Saser, please visit University of Nottingham’s website.

Icon image credit: Wikimedia Commons user Barakitty

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Scientists develop saser--an acoustic laser--that produces terahertz sound waves
June 19, 2009--Scientists at The University of Nottingham, in collaboration with colleagues in the Ukraine, have produced an acoustic laser device called a saser that is the first to emit in the terahertz range. While a laser (Light Amplification by the Stimulated Emission of Radiation) uses packets of electromagnetic vibrations called photons, the saser uses sound waves composed of sonic vibrations called phonons (see "'Saser' is resonant acoustic device").
In a laser, the photon beam is produced by stimulating electrons with an external power source so they release energy when they collide with other photons in a highly reflective optical cavity. This produces a coherent and controllable shining beam of laser light in which all the photons have the same frequency and rate of oscillation. The saser mimics this technology but using sound, to produce a sonic beam of phonons that travel, not through an optical cavity like a laser, but through a tiny manmade superlattice composed of around 50 super-thin sheets of two alternating semiconductor materials, gallium arsenide and aluminium arsenide, each layer just a few atoms thick. When stimulated by a power source (a light beam), the phonons multiply, bouncing back and forth between the layers of the lattice, until they escape out of the structure in the form of an ultrahigh frequency phonon beam.
A key factor in this new science is that the saser is the first device to emit sound waves in the terahertz frequency range. One example of its potential is as a sonogram, to look for defects in nanometer-scale objects like micro-electric circuits. Another idea is to convert the saser beam to THz electromagnetic waves for medical imaging and security screening.
The research team at Nottingham, with help from Borys Glavin of the Lashkarev Institute of Semiconductor Physics in the Ukraine, has won the immediate accolade of the publication of their paper on the saser experiments in this month'sPhysical Review. The team also won a grant of just over a million dollars from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council to develop saser technology over the next four years.
--Posted by Gail Overtongailo@pennwell.comwww.laserfocusworld.com.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Adam's Calendar
In and amongst a vast network of stone ruins is a site like no other. It is not stone circles. It is standing stone circles. There are giant standing stones like Stonehenge in Nelspruit! Johan Heine is attributed for rediscovering this site. This site is situated on Barberton cliff overlooking the Barberton impact crater just outside Nelspruit. Adams Calendar is a settlement of enormous standing stones made from dolerite. These massive stones have been brought onto this site from elsewhere. The builders of this site chose this location very carefully. It is situated exactly on the 31 degree latitude line which I am sitting on now in Durban, the white lions are sitting on in Timbavati, the pyramids of Giza are sitting on and St Petersburg in Russia is sitting in. This is an energetic layline running through mother earth.


On visiting this site one is startled straight away as standing at the entrance pillar is a giant stone man with a triangle carved in his forehead. In 1994 this stone man was stolen and some years later it was returned as a memorial plaque to the Blue Swallow Nature Reserve. Stone man has been moved from its original position, which is approximately 2 kilometres away up the hill and at the entrance to the main standing stone site. Stone man is not standing at the entrance to Adams calendar. Baba Mutwa calls stone man the clitoris of mother earth. This is because the clitoris is a frequency device.


On entering the Blue Swallow nature reserve, one begins a short climb up onto the cliff plateau and then the long walk up a winding causeway of standing stones and stone pointers, with smaller standing stone circles until we reach the big one, the entrance to the main calendar site.



Baba Mutwa was initiated there in 1937. He calls the place Inzalo ye Langa, ‘birthplace of the sun.' Michael Tellinger has called it Adams Calendar.

The energetic effect of this great standing stone circle is considerable. Adams calendar is a big standing stone circle about 30 metres in diameter and the tallest standing stone has fallen over. It measures about 4 metres. It is a carving of Horus. When it stood it would greet the rising sun.

The point where the rising sun meets with mother earth is the point that Baba Mutwa describes as “where heaven mates with mother earth.” Father Sun and Mother Earth are caught in a loving embrace, amongst the rising and setting of the entire starry cosmos.

There is also suggestion that at the point where Adams calendar is, there is a great crystal inside the earth, under this site. Bermuda Triangle is also said to have a great crystal beneath it, causing visitors to slip through dimensions and ‘disappear.' Yet I did not disappear like the sailors on Bermuda triangle when I stood at Adams Calendar however I did experience something deeply spiritual.

On standing between the calendar stones I felt a sense of peace and purpose. I will say I felt at one with God!







Stone Ruins

Southern Africa is scattered with ancient ruins. They are of an extreme antiquity. There is evidence that these ruins were devastated by a great flood in about 12 500 BC. Old maps of Africa, show the Port of Sofala in Mozambique. It is now underwater.It was linked to the kingdom on Monomotapa.

There was an ancient gold mining civilization in Southern Africa. In Tellinger's books and presentations he presents photographs of ancient mine shafts showing how this civilization had an unparalleled gold mining operation. Studies have revealed more than 20 000 of these ancient shafts in the Lichtenberg area alone, which suggests many  ancient mine shafts all over Southern Africa. These shafts were cut to such extraordinary precision and depths, that it suggests laser / saser technology was used to cut the rock.

The work of Johan Heine adds the context to this hypothesis. Johan was with the fire department in the Limpopo region. Johan has been flying helicopters in the area for many years. He has taken hundreds of aerial photographs of that region. Michael has augmented these with aerial photographs from google earth of the entire region of Southern Africa.

There are potentially 10 million stone circles all over Southern Africa. They are networked together and all linked together by roads and terraces. These photos create the impression of the stone circles being like cells on the skin of an animal, millions of circular cells all networked.

Some of these stone circles are well known and easy to visit from the ground. Visiting on the ground is a different experience to seeing them from the air. It is like visiting one isolated cell. 

On visiting the site at Watervalboven I noticed a sense of desertedness. What is otherwise quite a green area was suddenly parched. The sand was a deep red in colour. The stone circle there, is isolated, other than a couple of partial ruins beside it. This stone circle is strongly built with many small stones packed tightly into the walls. It has internal walls and all these walls are curved.

These stone circles have no distinct doors or entrances. They are elaborate patterns with one explanation. These circles were built in the cymatic shape of the resonant frequency of that point on the earth's surface. These circles imitated the physical representation of the sound vibration at that point on mother Earth. These stone circles were battery cells on the skin of mother earth. They tapped into the free and natural energy of mother Earth.

Sound = free energy.

Throughout the stone ruins of Southern Africa, Michael has found a large number of hand-held artefacts; cones and sacred stones. Michael calls this the ice cream cone phenomenon and in his books and presentations gives a lot of evidence for this, attributing his realisation to Ed Leedskalnin's design of Coral Castle.

The cones fit inside the sacred stones. He calls the sacred stone a frequency converter. Inside the sacred stone, the cone would be given a specific frequency. One cone would be charged with one frequency and another cone would be charged with a second frequency. Somebody could hold these two cones, one in either hand. These two cones would be pointed in a cross path. At the crossing point where these two distinct sound frequencies meet, objects could levitate. Michael added, “The higher the frequency, the higher the energy.” 

There is an intrinsic relationship between vibration and matter.

“Our entire body resonates at 7 hertz and approaches harmonic resonance of mother earth,” says Michael Tellinger.

The energy of the stone circles is measurable. Will current civilization re-use this free energy technology?
The age old symbol of the cross in the circle is associated with these ruins and there are many examples of ancient carvings of the cross in a circle found at sites all over the country. Michael has presented photographs of sound cymatics in microscopic detail which leads to the striking observation that the holy cross in a circle is generated from sound cymatics.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

No comments: